Ulmus 'Monstrosa'
Appearance
Ulmus glabra | |
---|---|
Cultivar | 'Monstrosa' |
Origin | France |
The Wych Elm cultivar Ulmus glabra 'Monstrosa' is believed to have originated in France.
Description
'Monstrosa' is a compact shrub, with branchlets often fasciated, and leaves 5–8 cm long, partly pitcher-shaped at the base, and on slender stalks < 25 mm long.[1]
Cultivation
A specimen at the Ryston Hall [3], Norfolk, arboretum, obtained from the Späth nursery in Berlin before 1914,[2] was killed by the earlier strain of Dutch elm disease prevalent in the 1930s. The shrub remains in cultivation in the Netherlands.[3]
Synonymy
- Ulmus campestris (: glabra) var. monstrosa: Lavallée, Arb. Segrez 235, 1877, and Hartwig, Ill. Geholzb. ed. 2, 294, 1892.
- Ulmus scabra (: glabra) var. monstrosa Hort.; Krüssmann, Handbuch der Laubgehölze 2: 536, 1962, as a cultivar.
Nurseries
North America
None known
Europe
- Herman Geers [4], Boskoop, Netherlands.